When new iSchool Assistant Professor of Digital Youth Jason Yip was a young kid growing up near Washington, D.C., one of his favorite pastimes was learning about science by exploring the areaâs world-class museums.
âNot that I donât love Seattleâbut one thing Seattle does not have is free museums,â Yip said. âI got luckyâmy parents were like, what do we do with him? Letâs just take him to the museum! I loved them, and I loved tinkering and messing around with things. By the time I was in high school, I was in love with science.â
That early love of science led Yip to an internship as an immunology researcher at the National Institute of Health while he was still in high school. While there, he discovered that while he definitely loved science, he was less happy with the actual day-to-day work of a medical research scientist.
âI didnât really like the micro things you have to do to be a lab scientist,â Yip explained. âA lot of lab science is playing around and messing aroundâbut sometimes we kill that. The daily repetition of cutting up mice just wasnât my thing.â
Yip continued exploring his passion for science as an undergrad, earning his BA in chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania. But by the time he embarked on his masterâs studies, heâd decided to explore a slightly new direction that favored his more exploratory approach. He enrolled in U. Pennâs Graduate School of Education, where he earned his M.S. in Science and Math Education.
There, Yip found that combining his passions for exploration and science made for a powerful combination in the classroom. He taught high school chemistry, biology, and math at area public and private schools for a total of six years.
But while the teaching itself was gratifying, the existing science teaching tools and curricula didnât live up to his expectations.
âI wasnât satisfied with the way science curricula were designed,â Yip said. âThey seemed outdated, and just werenât working for me. I realized I really wanted to spend my time thinking about what it means to teach chemistry, and what it means to design curriculum.â
To pursue that goal, Yip started Ph.D. studies at the University of Marylandâs College of Education. It was a rewarding field of study, but after three years thinking about chemistry education, a random event changed the course of Yipâs career again. His advisor accepted a position at the University of Illinois - Chicago.
âI had to decide whether I wanted to follow him, or did I want to stay in Maryland,â Yip said. âI decided because of my family to stay in Maryland. That turned out to be a really big decision thatâs shaped who I am. Iâve always been very interested in computing, so before he left, my advisor suggested I shift my focus to Human Computer Interaction (HCI).â Yip began working on child-computer interaction with a new advisor, Allison Druin, who was doing pioneering work in the field at Marylandâs iSchool and Human-Computer Interaction Lab (HCIL).
âThat was when it came together for me in one big theme,â Yip said. âHow do we think about designing learning technologies for children?â
Yip wrote his dissertation on how children develop a sense of ownership over science learning in a life-relevant learning environment. He focused on kidsâ interactions with technology, science, and cooking in an after-school program called Kitchen Chemistry. That work led to yet another big realizationâand one final twist in Yipâs path.
âIt made me realize there was a big missing piece in my research. I didnât know anything about what happened with these kids when they went home. How do they learn science with their families? I just assumed they did.â
Yip found the perfect place to explore that question when he accepted a post-doc research fellowship at the Sesame Workshopâs Joan Ganz Cooney Center in New York City.
âSesame Street has taken research very seriously for 40 years,â Yip said. âIt (Sesame Workshop) looks like a lot of fun, but theyâre thinking about hard problems, like how do children utilize technology with their families? How does technology help families come together? What can we do, particularly in my field, to get children and families to come together? All those bits and pieces came together into a research agenda that focuses on participation.â
Itâs been an eclectic path, but Yip feels heâs found the perfect home to continue his explorations at UWâs iSchool.
âI like the eclecticness of the iSchool here at Washington,â Yip said. âIt makes me feel comfortable to be in an environment where itâs okay to think something could have learning implications, but I donât have to hear the âLâ word (learning) all the time. It gives me a chance to breathe and be creative. I like being in a place where everyone came from a different place.â
Yip is currently the co-principal investigator on a four-year NSF funded project to develop a community-based social network of science learning tools. Science Everywhere is the continuation of his dissertation work, in which he will examine how mobile social media, large interactive tangible displays, and streaming media can support how families and children in neighborhoods engage in science together. Heâs eager to develop new research connections between the iSchool and UWâs College of Education. And heâs passionate about building a childrenâs co-design research team at the UW in which children and adolescents will partner with researchers to develop new youth-based technologies.
âIâm looking for helpers!â Yip said. âI want to explore what we can learn from children. Not as users, testers, or informantsâbut as (equal) partners in the design process. I want to help children become active citizens, active learners, and active users. Iâm really interested in designing with kids, and I think Seattle is a great place for that. Thatâs why my office is kind of a goofy place, because thatâs how I want it to be. You canât separate fun and learning.â